Monday, January 25, 2016

Presidential Crimes Then And Now — Paul Craig Roberts

Reprinted from Paul Craig Roberts, The
Neoconservative Threat to World Order (Clarity Press, 2015)

Are Nixon’s and the Reagan administration’s crimes
noticable on the scale of Clinton’s, George W. Bush’s, and Obama’s?

Not much remains of the once vibrant American
left-wing. Among the brainwashed remnants there is such a hatred of Richard
Nixon and Ronald Reagan that the commitment of these two presidents to ending
dangerous military rivalries is unrecognized. Whenever I write about the
illegal invasions of other countries launched by Clinton, George W. Bush, and
Obama, leftists point to Chile, Nicaragua and Grenada and say that nothing has changed.
But a great deal has changed. In the 1970s and 1980s Nixon and Reagan focused
on reducing Cold War tensions. Courageously, Nixon negotiated nuclear arms
limitation agreements with the Soviet Union and opened to China, and Reagan
negotiated with Gorbachev the end of the dangerous Cold War.

Beginning with the Clinton regime, the neoconservative
doctrine of the US as the Uni-power exercising hegemony over the world has
resurrected tensions between nuclear-armed powers. Clinton trashed the word of
the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations and expanded NATO throughout
Eastern Europe and brought the military alliance to Russia’s border. The George
W. Bush regime withdrew from the anti-ballistic missile treaty, revised US war
doctrine to permit pre-emptive nuclear attack, and negotiated with Washington’s
East European vassals to put anti-ballistic missiles on Russia’s borders in an
effort to neutralize Russia’s nuclear deterrent, thus bringing major security
problems to Russia. The Obama regime staged a coup against a government allied
with Russia in Ukraine, traditionally a part of Russia, and imposed a
Russophobia government as Washington’s vassal. Turning to China, Washington
announced the “pivot to Asia” with the purpose of controlling shipping in the
South China Sea. Additionally, the Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama regimes
fomented wars across a wide swath of the planet from Yugoslavia and Serbia
through the Middle East and Africa to South Ossetia and now in Ukraine.

The neoconservative ideology rose from the post-Reagan
collapse of the Soviet Union. The doctrine met the need of the US
military/security complex for a new enemy in order to avoid downsizing.
Washington’s pursuit of empire is a principal danger to life itself for
everyone on the planet.

Unlike Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama, Nixon and
Reagan went against the military/security complex. Nixon opened to China and
made arms reduction agreements with the Soviets. Reagan negotiated with
Gorbachev the end of the Cold War. The military/security complex was displeased
with these presidential initiatives. Both left and right accused Nixon and
Reagan of nefarious machinations. Right-wing Republicans said that Nixon and
Kissinger were selling America out to the communists and that the scheming
Soviets would take advantage of Reagan, the old movie actor. “Communists,” we
were assured, “only understand force.”

Nixon and Reagan focused on eliminating dangerous
rivalries, and the three stooges—Clinton, Bush, and Obama—have resurrected the
rivalries. Those who cannot see the astonishing difference are blinded by
prejudices and their brainwashing.

In this article, I describe unappreciated aspects of
the Nixon and Reagan presidencies. What I provide is neither a justification
nor a denunciation, but an explanation. Here is what Patrick Buchanan, who was
in the White House with both presidents, wrote to me in response to my
explanation:

“Craig, you are dead on in what you write about both
Nixon and Reagan and what they sought in their presidencies. Reagan often
talked of those ‘godawful weapons,’ meaning nukes. I was at Reykjavik with him,
and was stunned at Hofde House to learn that Ronald Reagan pretty much wanted
to trade them all away. And when, years later, Tom Wicker wrote favorably about
the Nixon presidency, he accurately titled his book One of Us. All
his life Nixon sought the approbation of the [pre-neocon] Establishment. Am
deep into a new book, based on my experiences and my White House files, and all
through it I am urging him [Nixon] to be and to become the kind of conservative
president I wanted, but he never was. My thanks for bringing in The
Greatest Comeback, which covered the period when I was closest to Nixon.
All the best, Pat.”

Writing for Americans is not always an enjoyable
experience. Many readers want to have their prejudices confirmed, not
challenged. Emotions rule their reason, and they are capable of a determined
resistance to facts and are not inhibited from displays of rudeness and
ignorance. Indeed, some are so proud of their shortcomings that they can’t wait
to show them to others. Some simply cannot read and confuse explanations with
justifications as if the act of explaining something justifies the person or
event explained. Thankfully, all readers are not handicapped in these ways or
there would be no point in trying to inform the American people.

In a recent column I used some examples of Clinton-era
scandals to make a point about the media, pointing out that the media and the
American people were more interested in Clinton’s sexual escapades and in his
choice of underwear than in the many anomalies associated with such serious
events as the Oklahoma City bombing, Waco, the mysterious death of a White
House legal counsel, US sanctions on Iraq that took the lives of 500,000 children,
and illegal war against Serbia.

Reaganphobes responded in an infantile way,
remonstrating that the same standards should be applied to “your dear beloved
Ray-Gun” as to Clinton. Those readers were unable to understand that the
article was not about Clinton, but about how the media sensationalizes
unimportant events in order to distract attention from serious ones. Examples
from the Clinton era were used, because no question better epitomizes the level
of the American public’s interest in political life than the young woman’s
question to President Clinton: “boxers or briefs?”

It is doubtful that journalists and historians are
capable of providing accurate understandings of any presidential term. Even
those personally involved often do not know why some things happened. I have
been in White House meetings from which every participant departed with a
different understanding of what the president’s policy was. This was not the
result of lack of clarity on the president’s part, but from the various interests
present shaping the policy to their agendas.

Many Americans regard the White House as the lair of a
powerful being who can snap his fingers and make things happen. The fact of the
matter is that presidents have little idea of what is transpiring in the vast
cabinet departments and federal agencies that constitute “their”
administration. Many parts of government are empires unto themselves. The “Deep
State,” about which Mike Lofgren, formerly a senior member of the Congressional
staff has written, is unaccountable to anyone. But even the accountable part of
the government isn’t. For example, the information flows from the cabinet
departments, such as defense, state, and treasury, are reported to Assistant
Secretaries, who control the flow of information to the Secretaries, who inform
the President. The civil service professionals can massage the information one
way, the Assistant Secretaries another, and the Secretaries yet another. If the
Secretaries report the information to the White House Chief of Staff, the
information can be massaged yet again. In my day before George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney gave us the Gestapo-sounding Department of Homeland Security, the Secret
Service reported to an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, but the Assistant
Secretary had no way of evaluating the reliability of the information. The
Secret Service reported whatever it suited the Secret Service to report.

Those who think that “the President knows” can test
their conviction by trying to keep up with the daily announcements from all
departments and agencies of the government. It is a known fact that CEOs of
large corporations, the relative size of which are tiny compared to the US
government, cannot know all that is happening within their organizations.

Nixon: Villain or Centrist Reformer?

I am not particularly knowledgeable about the terms of
our various presidents. Nevertheless, I suspect that the Nixon and Reagan terms
are among the least understood. Both presidents had more ideological opponents
among journalists and historians than they had defenders. Consequently, their
stories are distorted by how their ideological opponents want them to be seen
and remembered. For example, compare your view of Richard Nixon with the
portrait Patrick Buchanan provides in his latest book, The Greatest
Comeback. A person doesn’t have to agree with Buchanan’s view of the issues
of those years, or with how Buchanan positioned, or tried to position, Nixon on
various issues, to learn a great deal about Nixon. Buchanan can be wrong on
issues, but he is not dishonest.

For a politician, Richard Nixon was a very
knowledgeable person. He travelled widely, visiting foreign leaders. Nixon was
the most knowledgeable president about foreign policy we have ever had. He knew
more than Obama, Bush I and II, Clinton, Reagan, Carter, Ford, and Johnson
combined.

The liberal-left created an image of Nixon as paranoid
and secretive with a long enemies list, but Buchanan shows that Nixon was
inclusive, a “big tent” politician with a wide range of advisors. There is no
doubt that Nixon had enemies. Many of them continue to operate against him long
after his death.

Indeed, it was Nixon’s inclusiveness that made
conservatives suspicious of him. To keep conservatives in his camp, Nixon used
their rhetoric, and Nixon’s rhetoric fueled Nixon-hatred among the
liberal-left. The inclination to focus on words rather than deeds is another
indication of the insubstantiality of American political comprehension.

Probably the US has never had a more liberal president
than Nixon. Nixon went against conservatives and established the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) by executive order. He supported the Clean Air Act of
1970. Nixon federalized Medicaid for poor families with dependent children and
proposed a mandate that private employers provide health insurance to
employees. He desegregated public schools and implemented the first federal
affirmative action program.

Declaring that “there is no place on this planet for a
billion of its potentially most able people to live in angry isolation,” Nixon
engineered the opening to Communist China. He ended the Vietnam War and
replaced the draft with the volunteer army. He established economic trade with
the Soviet Union and negotiated with Soviet leader Brezhnev landmark arms
control treaties—SALT I and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 1972, which
lasted for 30 years until the neoconized George W. Bush regime violated and
terminated the treaty in 2002.

These are astonishing achievements for any president,
especially a Republican one. But if you ask Americans what they know about
Nixon, the response is Watergate and President Nixon’s forced resignation.

In other words, here is more proof that all the American
media does is to lie to us. The US media is no longer independent. It is a
servile captive creature that turns lies into truths via endless repetitions.

I am convinced that Nixon’s opening to China and
Nixon’s arms control treaties and de-escalation of tensions with the Soviet
Union threatened the power and profit of the military/security complex.
Watergate was an orchestration used to remove the threat that Nixon presented.
If you read the Watergate reporting by Woodward and Bernstein in the Washington
Post, there is no real information in it. In place of information, words
are used to create an ominous presence and sinister atmosphere that is
transferred to Nixon.

There was nothing in the Watergate scandal that
justified Nixon’s impeachment, but his liberal policies had alienated
conservative Republicans. Conservatives never forgave Nixon for agreeing with
Zhou Enlai that Taiwan was part of China. When the Washington Post, John Dean,
and a missing segment of a tape got Nixon in trouble, conservatives did not
come to his defense. The liberal-left was overjoyed that Nixon got his
comeuppance for supporting the exposure and prosecution of Soviet spy Alger
Hiss two decades previously.

I do not contend that the left-wing has no legitimate
reasons for hostility against Nixon. Nixon wanted out of Vietnam, but “with
honor” so that conservatives would not abandon him. Nixon did not want to
become known as the President who forced the US military to accept defeat. He
wanted to end the war, but if not with victory then with a stalemate like
Korea. He or Kissinger gave the US military carte blanche to produce a
situation that the US could exit “with honor.” This resulted in the secret
bombing in Laos and Cambodia. The shame of the bombings cancelled any exit with
real honor.

The Reagan era is also misunderstood. Just as
President Jimmy Carter was regarded as an outsider by the Democratic Washington
Establishment, Ronald Reagan was an outsider to the Republican Establishment
whose candidate was George H. W. Bush. Just as Carter’s presidency was neutered
by the Washington Establishment with the frame-up of Carter’s Budget Director
and Chief of Staff, Reagan was partially neutered before he assumed office, and
the Establishment removed in succession two national security advisors who were
loyal to Reagan.

Reagan’s Priorities and the Establishment’s Agenda

When Reagan won the Republican presidential
nomination, he was told that although he had defeated the Establishment in the
primaries, the voters would not be able to come to his defense in Washington.
He must not make Goldwater’s mistake and shun the Republican Establishment, but
pick its presidential candidate for his vice president. Otherwise, the
Republican Establishment would work to defeat him in the presidential election
just as Rockefeller had undermined Goldwater.

As a former movie star, Nancy Reagan put great store
on personal appearance. Reagan’s California crew was a motley one. Lynn
Nofziger, for example, sported a beard and a loosely knotted tie if a tie at
all. He moved around his office in sock feet without shoes. When Nancy saw
Bush’s man, Jim Baker, she concluded that the properly attired Baker was the
person that she wanted standing next to her husband when photos were made.
Consequently, Reagan’s first term had Bush’s most capable operative as Chief of
Staff of the White House.

To get Reagan’s program implemented with the
Republican Establishment occupying the chief of staff position was a hard
fight.

I don’t mean that Jim Baker was malevolent and wished
to damage Reagan. For a member of the Republican Establishment, Jim Baker was
very intelligent, and he is a hard person to dislike. The problem with Baker
was two-fold. He was not part of the Reagan team and did not understand what we
were about or why Reagan was elected. Americans wanted the stagflation that had
destroyed Jimmy Carter’s presidency ended, and they were tired of the ongoing
Cold War with the Soviet Union and its ever present threat of nuclear
Armageddon.

It is not that Baker (or VP Bush) were personally
opposed to these goals. The problem was that the Establishment, whether
Republican or Democratic, is responsive not to solving issues but to
accommodating the special interest groups that comprise the Establishment. For
the Establishment, preserving power is the primary issue. As The Saker makes
clear, in both parties the Anglos of my time, of which George H. W. Bush was
the last, have been replaced by the neocons. The neocons represent an ideology
in addition to special interest groups, such as the Israel Lobby.

The Republican Establishment and the Federal Reserve
did not understand Reagan’s Supply-Side economic policy. In the entire post
World War II period, reductions in tax rates were associated with the Keynesian
demand management macroeconomic policy of increasing aggregate demand. The
Reagan administration had inherited high inflation, and economists, Wall
Street, and the Republican Establishment, along with Reagan’s budget director,
David Stockman, misunderstood Reagan’s supply-side policy as a stimulus to
consumer demand that would cause inflation, already high, to explode. On top of
this, conservatives in Congress were disturbed that Reagan’s policy would
worsen the deficit—in their opinion the worst evil of all.

Reagan’s supply-side economic policy was designed not
to increase aggregate demand, but to increase aggregate supply. Instead of
prices rising, output and employment would rise. This was a radically new way
of using fiscal policy to raise incentives to produce rather than to manage
aggregate demand, but instead of helping people to understand the new policy,
the media ridiculed and mischaracterized the policy as “voodoo economics,”
“trickle- down economics,” and “tax cuts for the rich.” These
mischaracterizations are still with us three decades later. Nevertheless, the
supply-side policy was partially implemented. It was enough to end stagflation
and the policy provided the basis for Clinton’s economic success. It also
provided the economic basis that made credible Reagan’s strategy of forcing the
Soviets to choose between a new arms race or negotiating the end of the Cold
War.

Ending the Cold War and Bad CIA Advice

President Reagan’s goal of ending the Cold War was
upsetting to both conservatives and the military/security complex.
Conservatives warned that wily Soviets would deceive Reagan and gain from the
negotiations. The military/security complex regarded Reagan’s goal of ending
the Cold War as a threat comparable to Nixon’s opening to China and arms
limitations treaties with the Soviet Union. President John F. Kennedy had
threatened the same powerful interests when he realized from the Cuban Missile
Crisis that the US must put an end to the risk of nuclear confrontation with
the Soviet Union.

With the success of his economic policy in putting the
US economy back on its feet, Reagan intended to force a negotiated end to the
Cold War by threatening the Soviets with an arms race that their suffering
economy could not endure. However, the CIA advised Reagan that if he renewed the
arms race, he would lose it, because the Soviet economy, being centrally
planned, was in the hands of Soviet leaders, who, unlike Reagan, could allocate
as much of the economy as necessary to win the arms race. Reagan did not
believe the CIA. He created a secret presidential committee with authority to
investigate the CIA’s evidence for its claim, and he appointed me to the
committee. The committee concluded that the CIA was wrong.

Reagan always told us that his purpose was to end, not
win, the Cold War. He said that the only victory he wanted was to remove the
threat of nuclear annihilation. He made it clear that he did not want a Soviet
scalp. Like Nixon, to keep conservatives on board, he used their rhetoric.

Curing stagflation and ending the Cold War were the
main interests of President Reagan. Perhaps I am mistaken, but I do not think
he paid much attention to anything else.

Grenada and the Contras in Nicaragua were explained to
Reagan as necessary interventions to make the Soviets aware that there would be
no further Soviet advances and, thus, help to bring the Soviets to the
negotiating table to end the nuclear threat. Unlike the George W. Bush and
Obama regimes, the Reagan administration had no goal of a universal American
Empire exercising hegemony over the world. Grenada and Nicaragua were not part
of an empire-building policy. Reagan understood them as a message to the
Soviets that “you are not going any further, so let’s negotiate.”

Conservatives regarded the reformist

movements in Grenada and Nicaragua as communist subversion, and were concerned
that these movements would ally with the Soviet Union, thus creating more
Cuba-like situations. Even President Carter opposed the rise of a left-wing
government in Nicaragua. Grenada and Nicaragua were reformist movements rather
than communist-inspired, and the Reagan administration should have supported
them, but could not because of the hysteria of American conservatives. Reagan
knew that if his constituency saw him as “soft on communism,” he would lack the
domestic support that he needed in order to negotiate with the Kremlin the end
of the Cold War.

America Playing the Foreign Policy Game

Today Western governments support and participate in
Washington’s invasions, but not then. The invasion of Grenada was criticized by
both the British and Canadian governments. The US had to use its UN Security
Council veto to save itself from being condemned for “a fragrant violation of
international law.”

The Sandinistas in Nicaragua were reformers opposed to
the corruption of the Somoza regime that catered to American corporate and
financial interests. The Sandinistas aroused the same opposition from
Washington as every reformist government in Latin America always has.
Washington has traditionally regarded Latin American reformers as Marxist
revolutionary movements and has consistently overthrown reformist governments
in behalf of the United Fruit Company and other private interests that have
large holdings in countries ruled by unrepresentative governments.

Washington’s policy was, and still is, short-sighted
and hypocritical. The United States should have allied with representative
governments, not against them. However, no American president, no matter how
wise and well- intentioned, would have been a match for the combination of the
interests of politically-connected US corporations and the fear of more Cubas.
Remember Marine General Smedley Butler’s confession that he and his US Marines
served to make Latin America safe for the United Fruit Company and “some lousy
investment of the bankers.”

Information is Power

Americans, even well informed ones, dramatically
over-estimate the knowledge of presidents and the neutrality of the information
that is fed to them by the various agencies and advisors. Information is power,
and presidents get the information that Washington wants them to receive. In
Washington private agendas abound, and no president is immune from these
agendas. A cabinet secretary, budget director, or White House chief of staff
who knows how Washington works and has media allies is capable, if so inclined,
of shaping the agenda independently of the president’s preferences.

The Establishment prefers a nonentity as president, a
person without experience and a cadre of knowledgeable supporters to serve him.
Harry Truman was, and Obama is, putty in the hands of the Establishment.

If you read Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick’s The Untold History of the
US, you will see that the Democratic Establishment, realizing that FDR
would not survive his fourth term, forced his popular Vice President Henry
Wallace off the ticket and put in his place the inconsequential Truman. With
Truman in place, the military/security complex was able to create the Cold War.

From Bad to Worse

The transgressions of law that occurred during the
Nixon and Reagan years are small when compared to the crimes of Clinton, George
W. Bush and Obama, and the crimes were punished. Nixon was driven from office
and numerous Reagan administration officials were prosecuted and convicted.
Neither Nixon nor Reagan could have run roughshod over both Constitution and
statutory law, setting aside habeas corpus and due process and detaining US
citizens indefinitely without charges and convictions, authorizing and justifying
torture, spying without warrants, and executing US citizens without due process
of law.

Moreover, unlike the Clinton, Bush, and Obama regimes,
the Reagan administration prosecuted those who broke the law. Assistant
Secretary of State Elliott Abrams was convicted, National Security Advisor
Robert McFarlane was convicted, Chief of CIA Central American Task Force Alan
Fiers was convicted, Clair George, Chief of the CIA’s Division of Covert
Operations was convicted. Richard Secord was convicted. National Security
Advisor John Poindexter was convicted. Oliver North was convicted. North’s
conviction was later overturned, and President George H.W. Bush pardoned
others. But the Reagan Administration held its operatives accountable to law.
No American President since Reagan has held the government accountable.

Clair George was convicted of lying to congressional
committees. Richard Secord was convicted of lying to Congress. John Poindexter
was convicted of lying to Congress. Alan Fiers was convicted of withholding
information from Congress. Compare these convictions then with James R. Clapper
now. President Obama appointed Clapper Director of National Intelligence on
June 5, 2010, declaring that Clapper “possesses a quality that I value in all
my advisers: a willingness to tell leaders what we need to know even if it’s
not what we want to hear.” With this endorsement, Clapper proceeded to lie to
Congress under oath, a felony. Clapper was not indicted and prosecuted. He was
not even fired or forced to resign. For executive branch officials, perjury is
now a dead letter law.

The destruction of the rule of law and accountable
government has extended to state and local levels. Police officers no longer
“serve and protect” the public. The most dangerous encounter most Americans
will ever experience is with police, who brutalize citizens without cause and
even shoot them down in their homes and on their streets. A police badge has become
a license to kill, and police use it to the hilt. During the Iraq War, more
Americans were murdered by police than the military lost troops in combat. And
nothing is done about it. The country is again facing elections, and the abuse
of US citizens by “their” police is not an issue. Neither are the many illegal
interventions by Washington into the internal affairs of other sovereign
countries or the unconstitutional spying that violates citizens’ privacy.

The fact that Washington is gearing up for yet another
war in the Middle East is not an important issue in the election.

In the US the rule of law, and with it liberty, have
been lost. With few exceptions, Americans are too ignorant and unconcerned to
do anything about it. The longer the rule of law is set aside, the more
difficult it is to reestablish it. Sooner or later the rule of law ceases even
as a memory. No candidate in the upcoming election has made the rule of law an
issue.

Americans have become a small-minded divided people,
ruled by petty hatreds, who are easily set against one another and against
other peoples by their rulers.

Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many university appointments. His internet columns have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts' latest books areThe Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West